Early maladaptive schemas and addictive behaviours: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Sakulsriprasert Chaiyun1ORCID,Thawornwutichat Ratipan2,Phukao Darunee3,Guadamuz Thomas E.24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities Chiang Mai University Chiang Mai Thailand

2. Center of Excellence in Research on Gender, Sexuality and Health, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities Mahidol University Nakhon Pathom Thailand

3. Department of Health Social Science, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities Mahidol University Nakhon Pathom Thailand

4. John F. Kennedy School of Government Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundRecently, early maladaptive schemas have been increasingly focused as the underlying factor of several psychopathologies. The primary objective is to systematically review and meta‐analytically analyse the evidence on the relationship between early maladaptive schemas and types of addictive behaviours. Additionally, the secondary objective was to examine potential moderators of the effect sizes.MethodsThe systematic search was conducted on three databases including ‘Scopus’, ‘Web of Science’ and ‘PubMed’. They were searched for quantitative studies investigating the relationship between early maladaptive schemas and addictive behaviours. The studies that were non‐English and had insufficient information to calculate effect sizes were excluded. The random‐effect model was utilized to estimate the pool effect sizes, and the meta‐regression was used for moderation analysis.ResultsThirty‐three studies with 12,577 participants were included for analyses. Most of included studies were conducted in the United States (k = 12, 36.36%). The mean ages of participants varied from 13.32 to 46.09 years. The findings indicated that all of early maladaptive schemas and schema domains positively correlated with addictive behaviours. The disconnection and rejection, impaired limits and impaired autonomy were the domains with the highest association with substance addictions (pool r = 0.338, 3.26 and 3.16, respectively). Furthermore, disconnection and rejection and impaired autonomy were the schema domains with the highest association with behavioural addictions (0.310 and 0.304, respectively). The moderation analysis demonstrated that study design was the factor affecting the effect sizes between schema domain and addictive behaviours.LimitationAll included studies were from peer‐reviewed journals in English. Moreover, the number of research examining the relationship between early maladaptive schemas and behavioural addictions was limited.ConclusionThe findings provide evidence supporting the idea that substance addictions and behavioural addictions have shared risk factors, supporting the validity of the schema model, which can be applied for targeting and preventing addictive behaviours.

Funder

Mahidol University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Clinical Psychology

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